AFTER
GOAL builds 1,000 houses for poor in Uganda
Four-room home for vulnerable families costs just €4,500
GOAL has just completed building its 1,000th home for vulnerable families in Southern Uganda.
Since it was established three years ago, GOAL’s housing support programme has renovated or built new homes for thousands of orphans and families who have been affected by HIV or AIDS in the east African country.
Prior to taking ownership of their new brick-built homes, families had been living in makeshift shacks, grass houses and leaking mud huts. With no access to latrines or clean water, poor health and disease was rife.
Re-housed families are now living in multi-room houses, which provide shelter, warmth, water and sanitation facilities. New home owners are given household goods, including stoves, mattresses and blankets. Mosquito nets are also supplied to help prevent malaria infection.
The new houses cost just €4,500 to build and GOAL CEO John O’Shea is encouraging Irish businesses, groups and people to fundraise or club together to buy a house for a needy family.
“This programme has been an extraordinary success but we need the help of the Irish people now more than ever to help us reach our target of 1,500 houses. There are many more families living in desperate conditions that urgently require our assistance,” said Mr. O’Shea.